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Convert JPG images to PNG format for lossless quality and transparency support, right in your browser.
Convert JPG to PNG when a workflow needs PNG compatibility or a lossless re-save target after edits. The conversion cannot restore detail that JPEG compression already removed, cannot recreate transparency, and usually creates a larger file. Because browser canvas export commonly strips EXIF, ICC, GPS, orientation, and camera metadata, the converted PNG should be treated as a working copy rather than an archival original.
PNG is lossless and often inefficient for photos; keep JPEG or WebP when small photographic files matter.
JPG has no alpha channel, so conversion preserves existing pixels rather than creating transparency.
Conversion cannot recover original detail; use the highest-quality original available.
Canvas-based conversion commonly strips EXIF, ICC, GPS, orientation, and camera metadata. Keep the original file for archival use.
JPG to PNG conversion is handled in the browser for normal use. Treat the PNG as a new rendered copy and review file size, color, and metadata requirements before replacing the source.
Start from the best available JPG and note whether metadata, orientation, or color profile information matters.
Generate the PNG and compare visible quality, dimensions, and file size against the original.
Use PNG for compatibility or editing, but keep the JPG when compact photo delivery is the priority.
Upload or drag & drop your JPG/JPEG file
Click "Convert to PNG" to transform your image
Preview the result and download your PNG file
PNG format preserves every pixel without compression artifacts
Output supports alpha transparency for compositing workflows
Maintains original image dimensions and color depth
All processing happens in your browser — your images never leave your device
Convert a JPEG mockup to PNG for a tool that expects PNG, then check the larger file size.
Make a PNG copy before adding annotations so repeated JPEG compression is avoided.
PNG is lossless and supports transparency — ideal for logos, graphics, screenshots, and any image where quality matters.
Yes, PNG files are typically larger than JPEG because PNG uses lossless compression. The trade-off is perfect quality preservation.
Converting from JPG to PNG preserves the original image. To add transparency, you need an image editor — but the PNG format will support it once edited.
No. PNG prevents another round of JPEG compression, but it cannot restore detail already lost in the original JPG.
No. JPG files do not contain an alpha channel, so the converted PNG keeps the existing background pixels rather than making them transparent.
Keep the original JPG unless you are sure the PNG copy meets the destination requirement. The JPG may be smaller, may include camera metadata, and may be the only version closest to the source capture before canvas rendering.
The converter changes the file container and compression method, but it cannot rebuild details that were already blurred, blocky, or color-shifted by prior JPEG compression. Start with the highest quality source available.
Use JPG or WebP for photographic delivery when small files and fast loading matter more than lossless editing. PNG is usually better for screenshots, text, diagrams, and assets that need repeated edits.
Open the converted file and compare dimensions, background pixels, file size, color, and metadata needs. If the PNG is only for compatibility, keep the original JPG for storage and future exports.